The documentary which follows the Australian Christian group Hillsong UNITED in concert retook the top position at the box office over the weekend, earning another $30,288, according to audience measurement firm Rentrak. Last week it was displaced from no. 1 by Ron Howard's Beatles documentary.

In four weeks of release Hillsong, directed by Michael John Warren, has tallied an impressive $2,359,992, making it one of the top-performing nonfiction films of the year.

​"I've never had an experience with God in the movie theater," says one fan on hillsongmovie.com. "This movie changed that."

Coming in second over the weekend was the heartwarming documentary Harry & Snowman, directed by Ron Davis. It tells the story of a Dutch immigrant and horseman who bought a plow horse bound for the glue factory. Within two years, against all odds, they had won show jumping's triple crown.

Third place went to Generation Startup, a documentary about a young and diverse group of entrepreneurs. The film directed by Cynthia Wade and Cheryl Miller Houser has won praise from entrepreneurs including Arianna Huffington, Steve Case and Shark Tank's Daymond John.

"Who are these Democrats and what are they hiding?" D'Souza asks in the film. His answer to the first part of the question is hypocrites; as to what Democrats are hiding, he asserts it's a history of collusion with the Ku Klux Klan and other dark deeds.

As detailed in previous posts on Nonfictionfilm.com, the film can make some claim to historical accuracy, but its arguments do not pass the test of intellectual honesty. The true hypocrisy is to slam the Democratic Party while failing to note that its worst elements [Jim Crow-supporting Southerners] later decamped to the Republican Party.

Honest or not, the film is a bona fide hit, having now made $13,096,556. Ironically, it returned to the top five the same weekend that many Americans spent watching something else -- the second presidential debate, and, oh yes, Donald Trump's Access Hollywood lewd-talking video.